Health Care News

There are some health care news of a Tuesday afternoon. Retirement is a huge factor in health care costs. Medicare doesn’t kick in until 65 for most people. Health care reform should make insurance more affordable for early retirees, but not until 2014. So the government has set up a fund to reimburse employers for some of their retiree health expenses. Today, the Health and Human Services Department announced the first round of companies that are eligible for that money. Nearly 2,000 employers — from businesses, to unions to government — will be reimbursed by the Early Retiree Reinsurance Program. The federal government will pay 80 percent of retiree medical claims above a $5,000 deductible.

HHS Secretary Kathleen Sebelius says the goal is to encourage employers to maintain health insurance for former workers. The percentage of large firms providing workers with retired health coverage is dropping. It was 66 percent of employers in 1988, and it’s now down to 29 percent in 2009. Congress set up the fund as a carrot to keep company support for health reform. Many firms are locked into insuring their retirees, even though they no longer offer that retirement benefit for new workers. The fund will cover claims between now and 2014, when a more competitive insurance market should lower premiums for retirees. But Congress set aside only $5 billion.

There’s good precedent for believing so. Health care costs have always exceeded expectations. If the money runs out, Congress will be left to decide whether to offer more support, or face the prospect of employers throwing retirees off the company health plan.

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Posted by on Sep 1 2010. Filed under Health. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0. You can leave a response or trackback to this entry

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